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	<title>mikestratton.com &#187; Everybody Dreams</title>
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		<title>News, Reviews &amp; all that Jazz</title>
		<link>http://mikestratton.com/playlists/news-reviews-all-that-jazz</link>
		<comments>http://mikestratton.com/playlists/news-reviews-all-that-jazz#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 16 Oct 2009 16:01:17 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Mike</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Playlists]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Alcohol and Addiction Cure]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Detroit Jazz Festival 2009]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Detroit poem]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Dream Group]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Everybody Dreams]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Olive Kitteridge]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[vinyl side of midnight]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Entry for Fall, 2009
Everybody Dreams
	There will be a reading and a book signing at Schuler Books in Okemos on Wednesday, October 28, 2009 at 7:00p.m. Hope to see you there.
	I’ll also be starting a NEW Dream Group. Some of the fans of the book have discussed when I’m starting a new dream group and this [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Entry for Fall, 2009</p>
<p>Everybody Dreams</p>
<p>	There will be a reading and a book signing at Schuler Books in Okemos on Wednesday, October 28, 2009 at 7:00p.m. Hope to see you there.</p>
<p>	I’ll also be starting a NEW Dream Group. Some of the fans of the book have discussed when I’m starting a new dream group and this one will start in mid November. We’ll meet week on Thursday nights, 6-7:15p.m. for a total of 16 sessions (just like the novel!). The cost is  $45 per group. Space is limited to six attendees. So call me at #336-7721 to sign up. </p>
<p>How I Spent My Summer</p>
<p>	This has been a very full season for me and I’m grateful for all the opportunities I’ve had this summer.  There were speaking engagements in Traverse City (Motivational Enhancement &#038; Cognitive Behavioral Treatment for the M.S.U. Summer Institute with Monkey Business Consulting), Montreal (The Solution Focused Process for the International Policy Governance group that services boards of directors around the world with Sue Stratton), and Detroit Ren Cen (MET/CBT again for the State of Michigan Substance Abuse Conference). Deborah Johnson Wood and I served as coordinators for this year’s annual Peninsula Writers Summer retreat at Glen Lake, with Guggenheim winning poet and novelist Laura Kasischke as our keynote speaker. I emceed at both the Lansing and Detroit Jazz Festivals. Cathie Blumer and I traveled to New York for a week of research on my new novel in August. In between it all I had book signings in Traverse City, Montreal and Grand Rapids. Again, I am eternally grateful for all of these wonderful chances to connect with such diverse groups of people over ideas and creativity.  	</p>
<p>Book Reviews<br />
	THE ALCOHOLISM AND ADDICTION CURE (A Holistic Approach to Total Recovery) by Chris Prentiss; Power Press</p>
<p>	This past year I started to hear clients talking about this book, then saw it advertised on television, so I knew that I had to read it myself. The book asks the question: Is There A Cure For Alcoholism? and answers an emphatic YES! So, first as a clinician and secondly as a practitioner of a different approach to recovery, I was very interested in checking this out.<br />
	Chris Prentiss is the author of a dozen self help books. I haven’t read any of these but it is interesting, first of all, that this is his background. He isn’t a doctor or a therapist. He goes at great lengths to describe his upbringing by a sociopathic mother and his own problems that he experienced early in life. One of the best features of the book is a very extended chapter written by Chris’ son, Pax, who describes his own story of addiction and recovery.<br />
	I had a mixed reaction to the book. I felt that Mr. Prentiss makes some good points and I would like to expound a little of the positives and negatives about this book:</p>
<p>POSITIVES:</p>
<p>	Mr. Prentiss stresses the need for an individualized treatment approach, something you don’t always find in the treatment of addictions. And I agree with this.<br />
Mr. Prentiss takes some well deserved swipes at the field of addiction treatment, though he also offers a disclaimer in support of Alcoholics Anonymous. Much like Herb Trimpe does in his work with Rational Recovery. I DO think that there needs to be alternatives to A.A. Because A.A., in spite of having the best recovery rate of available programs, doesn’t work for everybody. And maybe nothing will work for everybody. But if there are several viable options for recovery, all the better. And they don’t need to be at war with one another.<br />
	I also liked the very strong focus on both the physical and psychological health of the client. Chris and Pax are founders of a treatment center in Malibu. He encourages everyone who can to attend his treatment center, naturally. However, if you can’t, he descibes how one can design their own treatment.<br />
	You see, Mr. Prentiss doesn’t believe that people use drugs or drink too much because they are alcoholics or addicts. He doesn’t like those terms. He believes that there is one or a variety of several reasons WHY people use. Here are those reasons:</p>
<p>Cause 1: Chemical imbalance<br />
Cause 2: Unresolved events from the past<br />
Cause 3: Beliefs you hold that are inconsistent with what is true<br />
Cause 4: Inability to cope with current conditions</p>
<p>(It is interesting to contrast these causes with what research is telling us about who is likely to become addicted: a blend of genetic predetermination with either depression, anxiety, trauma, delinquency or truancy as key variables.)</p>
<p>	So Mr. Prentiss believes that one must address the underlying cause to cure the addiction.<br />
	And then, and this is important, the individual can NEVER use drugs or alcohol again. I’m betting this is disappointing to most alcoholics and addicts, who usually go through an extensive search to find a way to continue to have drugs or alcohol in their lives successfully before surrendering to abstinence.<br />
	Mr. Prentiss encourages the use of a holistic team of healers to address the underlying issues: integrative medicine, traditional Chinese medicine, clinical psychology, marriage and/or family therapy, hypnotherapy, personal fitness, visualization and meditation and spiritual therapy. He also encourages the creation of a healing circle of friends that will support your new self.</p>
<p>NEGATIVES:</p>
<p>	As I mentioned above, Mr. Prentiss is not a physician, nor a PhD nor a therapist. But he does believe in change as a reality which is a positive. At the end of the day, the addict still has to remain abstinent, so where’s the cure? And the swipes he takes at A.A. are, I think, unnecessary. </p>
<p>	Bottom line: in the A.A. literature they relate that “We know but a little&#8230;” and I’m glad people are out there researching and finding new avenues to recovery. A.A. says that those who complete the program are ‘recovered’ or cured from their alcoholism. But in the end, they say that the most an alcoholic can hope for is a ‘daily reprieve’ from their condition. It doesn’t sound like Mr. Prentiss offers much more than that.</p>
<p>OLIVE KITTERIDGE by Elizabeth Strout; Random House</p>
<p>	This book won the pulitzer prize in literature last year and it’s sure easy to see why. What wonderful writing and what a great character we have in Olive Kitteridge.<br />
The book is actually less a novel than it is a collection of short stories, all set in the small town of Crosby, Maine. But all of the stories feature Olive. Sometimes her appearance seems more like a cameo. Few of the baker’s dozen focus squarely on her. This really doesn’t seem like a device, but a fascinating way to reveal aspects of a character through the eyes of a spouse, a son, a neighbor, an acquaintance. Such triangulation brings out aspects of personality that are often overlooked in fiction.<br />
	There is an old adage in psychology. There is the person we know ourselves to be, then the person we reveal to those closest to us. And yet another person who we are known by in public. Few stories delve into each of these facets of character, but Elizabeth Strout just nails it in this book.<br />
	We are treated first to a loving and bittersweet portrait of Henry, Olive’s faithful but wistful husband in the very first chapter. Subsequent chapters take us to a piano bar, a wedding reception, a donut shop, the reception following a funeral. I don’t want to reveal any thing else of consequence, because the reader will be delighted and in despair by the discovery of the events of Olive’s life. This is a book I spent hours reading aloud to my girl friend, and I don’t know which of us had a better time at it. This is a book that will make you laugh out loud (which is what began to reading out loud) and it will make you cry. And for all the vinegar that runs in Olive’s veins, you will come to love her. Do yourself a favor and get this book. And if you can, read it out loud to someone you love.</p>
<p>Detroit JazzFest 2009</p>
<p>	Speaking of the Detroit Jazz Festival, Meegan Holland and I posted daily blog entries for MLIVE and Cathie Blumer contributed photos for this year’s event. I wanted to post my diary for the festival. I understand now that 700,000 people attended this festival, which has got to be the largest FREE jazz festival in the U.S.A., maybe the world. It is the best thing Detroit has to offer.<br />
	The Festival is always held on the weekend of Labor Day, but this event felt like it started for me the Sunday before, when I interviewed Festival &#038; Artistic Director Terri Pontremoli. Terri is such a great interview, so bubbly and effervescent, a great ball of kinetic energy and a smile you can see over the phone. When it looked like the Detroit Jazz Festival was about to fold, Gretchen Valade (the owner of Carhartt clothing, Mack Avenue Records and the Dirty Dog restaurant) stepped in as a benefactor. One of the best things she did was to bring on board Terri Pontremoli, who has done such an amazing job of booking great talent and keeping a blend of new and old, local and international. But also keeping the emphasis on jazz. So many jazz festivals these days put jazz off to the side while their headliners are pop musicians.<br />
	On Friday, we (Holland, Blumer &#038; Stratton) checked into the Ren Cen and headed towards that evening’s event: two headliners to open the festival, Hank Jones and Chick Corea/Stanley Clarke/Lenny White. After proclamations and awards had been deservedly doled out, Hank Jones took the stage. He was dapperly dressed in an elegant dark pin striped suit. He was joined on stage by bass stalwart George Mraz and drummer Carl Allen.<br />
	The trio opened with an easy stride performing at first Horace Silver’s Nica’s Dream, then a Wes Montgomery tune. I noticed that the 92 year old Jones would at times vocalize along with his piano solos, something I remember his brother Elvin doing when I saw him perform years ago. Hank’s playing was the epitome of grace and taste.<br />
	At one point Jones’ music blew off the stage, just as the band had kicked into J.J. Johnson’s Lament, which lead to an extended bass solo by George Mraz (what a beautiful tone he has!). They did a Charlie Parker tune (Jones is one of the last surviving musicians to have actually played with Bird), a tune by Hank’s other brother Thad (A Child Is Born) and some other classics. The trio encored by performed Thelonious Monk’s Round About Midnight.<br />
	The second piano trio of the evening also stuck to the acoustic format. Chick Corea, Stanley Clarke and Lenny White began by playing the Return To Forever tune 500 Miles High. Their playing was dynamic and blazingly fast but always tasteful. They next played a Monk tune, I Mean You and I thought about the evening being a Tale of Two Pianos, contrasting styles and generations. Lenny White’s drumming was more propulsive than swinging, a reflection of the rock influence on jazz in the 1970s. Stanley Clarke is such a virtuoso! I’d forgotten how much I liked his playing.<br />
	This trio then performed I Love You Porgy, followed by a dissonant interlude the morphed from a passage that sounded influenced by Bartok to Monk’s Straight No Chaser, before Clarke started a walking bass line and Lenny White started swinging underneath. The band’s encore was a medley of the Concerto de Aranjuez (via Miles Davis’ Sketches of Spain) and the Chick Corea original Spain. Chick lead a kind of a sing along with the Detroit audience, which was clearly enraptured with the music. Everyone went home happy.<br />
	Meegan and I stayed up too late blogging at the Ren Cen lounge, while listening to a jam session that got progressively more interesting as the night progressed. Orrin Evans, Sean Jones, etc. etc. One table away a woman was holding forth with her pet dog, every musician in the place coming by to visit and chat. Turns out it was Dee Dee Bridgewater.<br />
	The next morning I wrote this poem while sitting in the Starbucks at the Ren Cen:</p>
<p>			DETROIT<br />
sitting in the coffee shop<br />
Saturday, Detroit<br />
a cylinder of glass, concrete &#038; steel,<br />
motown gives ‘the finger’<br />
to the midwest<br />
just as Joe Louis’ fist<br />
is in your face<br />
so is Detroit<br />
attitude, swagger<br />
not a sneer, but hip,<br />
hipper than you, and tough<br />
and music</p>
<p>from where i sit there<br />
is music, a big band<br />
practicing in a ballroom<br />
the sound bleeding<br />
into the core of the ren cen</p>
<p>detroit bleeds music<br />
marvin &#038; stevie &#038; smokey<br />
diana &#038; gordy &#038; aretha<br />
iggy &#038; eminem &#038; grand funk</p>
<p>and jazz&#8230;.<br />
this weekend is about jazz<br />
the players are the painters<br />
the city is the canvas<br />
the canvas Joe Louis<br />
danced on to kick ass<br />
the canvas Diego Rivera<br />
used to sketch his great mural<br />
the canvas of pollsters who<br />
found out what’s happening<br />
the canvas of a city<br />
the music is the<br />
paint of culture<br />
and people, pain and laughter<br />
work, effort, blood funk &#038; attitude<br />
swagger<br />
“Hey Baby!”<br />
that’s Detroit</p>
<p>	I reflected on that very specific swagger that is so uniquely Detroit, a vibe that is so different than the New York vibe I was still feeling from a week before.<br />
	Ate a king’s breakfast at the Coney Island on Woodward (eggs, grits, sausage and pancakes) with Meegan and Cathie and slipped down to the ‘Talk Tent’ and heard a group of drummer (including Carl Allen, Karriem Riggins, Gayelynn McKinney and Michael Nastos) discuss Elvin Jones. This is such an interesting aspect of the festival, the chance to hear musicians meet and talk music. The consensus seemed that it was a journey to ‘get’ Elvin. The most entertaining story and insights were provided by Carl Allen, who talked about Elvin playing the drum kit at Bradley’s in New York on a tiny stand (“I like these drums but they won’t stay still.”) Carl also pointed out, and vocally displayed, how when most drummers play triplets they accent the first beat, but Elvin accented the second. Interesting.<br />
	Checked out a ripping set by Dee Dee Bridgewater and the MSU Big Band, conducted by Rodney Whitaker. Then slipped down to the Pyramid Stage to catch Jose James in his skinny grey suit. I heard two concert goers behind me describe him as a cross between Big Joe Williams and Al Jarreau. I am always impressed by how hip and knowledgeable the audience is at the Detroit Jazz Fest. I agreed with the guys in the audience, though I would add the ingredient of Gil Scott Heron. How is it that Jose James isn’t signed by a major record label? Somebody should snatch this guy up. He treated the audience to versions of Equinox and Stolen Moments, using a technique I’ve heard practiced by Eddie Jefferson and Kurt Elling to sing a solo using poetry instead of scatting. The keyboard player (who?) was great.<br />
	The big problem with the Detroit Jazz Festival is that there is NO WAY to catch everything. I left Jose James before his set was over in order to catch part of Sean Jones’ set at the Water Stage. I heard him play a soulful version of Mama with some gospel overtones.<br />
	We withdrew to try and blog midday and ended up missing too much music. So all of our blogs were entered very late p.m. or early a.m. after that. Live and learn.<br />
	In the early evening I caught part of Louis Hayes hard bop unit, featuring a great front line of Jeremy Pelt and Vincent Herring.<br />
	One of the highlights of the festival was Benny Maupin’s Dolphyana. Maupin was on sax but also clarinet and (my favorite) bass clarinet. Nestor Torres was filling in for James Newton on flute, with Jay Hoggard on vibes and Billy Hart on drums. The band performed Dolphy tunes, The Panther, Something Sweet Something Tender and Out To Lunch. They also performed a Maupin original, Message to Prez, which Benny dedicated to Lester Young. This was performed as a trio, with a series of existential queries, many phrases sounding like questions to the open skies of Detroit. No answers. The most avant garde event I caught all weekend.<br />
	Meanwhile, on the Main Stage Christian McBride’s Inside Straight was swinging away like crazy. They used a combination of originals and standards of the mainstream. A mix of muscle and finesse. I thought of Lionel Hampton while I listened to relative new comer Warren Wolf on the vibraphone. The band performed Brother Mister, which somehow seemed that the title track for the festival this year.<br />
	On Sunday, after blogging and another Coney Island breakfast with Meegan and Cathie, I picked up my emcee credentials and headed to the Pyramid Stage to introduce Jesse Palter. She is a great young singer via Detroit and Chicago and we will hear more of her. Jesse played several originals and made it clear that she’s a good developing writer as well as a song bird.<br />
	I introduced the Waterford Kettering high school band at the Meijer Education stage in the afternoon. These young kids were set up behind me and I was reminded of Beevis and Butthead when I said “Here is a group of up and comers&#8230;” only to hear a voice a few feet behind me snicker “He said ‘come’&#8230;” It was really all I could do not to laugh.<br />
	I caught up with my nephew, now Detroiter Ron Stratton for awhile in the afternoon and ate too much Greek food. Then headed to the Water Stage to introduce Geri Allen and quartet. Allen was having a dispute with the sound man, who was doing everything to address her concerns. Interesting to have a back stage perspective on how things get set up.<br />
	Geri Allen’s quartet featured a tap dancer on several of the tunes, whom she used as an instrumentalist. One of the highlights of the set was a ‘duet’ between the drummer and the dancer, which brought the huge audience to a standing ovation, just 20 minutes into the music. Geri continued to be highly creative by using a poet (Sandra Turner Barnes) and playing a great mix of originals and standards (McCoy Tyner’s Blues By 5).<br />
	Finished the day by listening to the Wayne Shorter Quartet play an uninterrupted 80 minute set of improv based music that was Herculean. I recognized Sanctuary and Myrrh in the mix, but I think most of the music wasn’t just the first time I’d heard it, it was the first time the band had heard it. I blogged at length about this show and if you want more, hunt down the MLIVE blog from the Detroit Jazz Fest. As impressed as I was with the music, I was JUST as impressed with the Detroit audience, who gave a roaring standing ovation at the end of the show.<br />
	Monday was short. We were exhausted and needed to return home to get ready for another busy week of work, but not before catching Rodney Whitaker’s salute to Donald Byrd’s A New Perspective. His wife, Cookie, was leading a gospel choir that offset the terrific line up of Mack Avenue talent. A wonderful way to end a perfect weekend of music.</p>
<p>Here is the line up for the end of the 2009’s Vinyl Side of Midnight</p>
<p>10/18/09 = DECADES: 1960s<br />
1025/09 = New Stuff<br />
11/01/09 = DECADES: 1970s<br />
11/08/09 = New Stuff<br />
11/15/09 = DECADES: 1980s<br />
11/22/09 = DECADES: 1990s<br />
11/29/09 = New Stuff<br />
12/06/09 = Best of 2009 Pt. 1<br />
12/13/09 = DECADES: 2000s<br />
12/20/09 = Holiday Show<br />
12/27/09 = Best of 2009</p>
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		<item>
		<title>SUMMER/FALL 2009 Views, News &amp; Review</title>
		<link>http://mikestratton.com/playlists/summerfall-2009-views-news-review</link>
		<comments>http://mikestratton.com/playlists/summerfall-2009-views-news-review#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 16 Aug 2009 17:07:12 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Mike</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Playlists]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Cool Water]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Elmore Leonard]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Everybody Dreams]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Robert Busby]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Rodney Whitaker]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Steven Hall]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[WNLZ]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[END OF SUMMER / BEGINNING OF FALL 2009
New updates on Everybody Dreams, the changes at WLNZ (and the Final Side of Midnight?), book reviews and more&#8230;
Everybody Dreams
New book signings have been scheduled at Schuler Books in Grand Rapids for 9/10/09 at the 28th Street store, 7 p.m. There will be media attention in G.R. before [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>END OF SUMMER / BEGINNING OF FALL 2009</p>
<p>New updates on Everybody Dreams, the changes at WLNZ (and the Final Side of Midnight?), book reviews and more&#8230;</p>
<p>Everybody Dreams</p>
<p>New book signings have been scheduled at Schuler Books in Grand Rapids for 9/10/09 at the 28th Street store, 7 p.m. There will be media attention in G.R. before the signing and reading, including a review and story in the Grand Rapids Press. </p>
<p>There is another signing at Schuler Books in Okemos, 10/28/09 at 7 p.m.<br />
I am humbled at the local response to the book. Schuler Books has called several times this summer, requesting more books. It has been one of their best sellers of the year. And every time I run into someone who talks about reading it, they relate that they’ve passed their copy on to a friend or relative. That is very flattering, that the readers want to share the book with others.</p>
<p>I had a great time doing signings at Horizon Books in Traverse City, Montreal at the IPGA conference and espescially at the St. Lawrence campus of Sparrow Hospital. Anyone who has read the book knows that several of the scenes are set at a certain Lansing-based psychiatric hospital, and it felt very special to do a reading and a signing for the staff at St. Lawrence.</p>
<p>WLNZ &#038; The Final Vinyl?</p>
<p>WLNZ is making some big changes and I know only a little about these. I’ve been approached by several people in the community, wanting to know more about the changes and who to talk to about keeping jazz radio alive in Lansing. I’ll relate what I know, and, if you have concerns, where to direct your concerns.</p>
<p>WLNZ is shifting to a AAA format. Triple A is Adult Album Alternative. It has a lot of classic rock and is designed to draw a larger audience. I’m told these are decisions that have been made by LCC’s Marketing Director, Lucian Leone (leonel@lcc.edu) and Jane Kreha (krehaj@lcc.edu). I’ve been told by WLNZ’s administration that feedback should be directed to these sources. There will be an outside consultant that will be working with WLNZ and will be making further changes to the station.</p>
<p>Already you’ve seen a loss of dozens of hours of jazz programming each week. What remains at this point is Byron Lyle’s Crystal Jazz, Jim Stone’s Big Band Swing, Sunday Jazz and my show, The Vinyl Side of Midnight. Even with the huge loss of hours, WLNZ still remains the only station in town that offers this much classic and straight ahead jazz. But that might change. </p>
<p>I’ll be bummed to lose the show, but on the other hand it’s been a great run of thirteen years and counting. I like to think I’ve done a little bit in serving the jazz community in Lansing, helping some people learn about this great art form and gain a deeper appreciation for the music.  More will be revealed, but it isn’t out of the realm of possibility that these next few shows could be the Final Side of Midnight.</p>
<p>BOOKS</p>
<p>I just finished reading three amazing books that I have to mention here.</p>
<p>Cool Water; Alcoholism, Mindfulness, and Ordinary Recovery by William Alexander</p>
<p>	This is a book I’m recommending to friends and clients in recovery. It is a deeply inspired work, that is in turn inspiring. For anyone interested in recovery, struggling with recovery, or wants to figure how to blend Buddhism with recovery, this book is a jewel. Alexander speaks from the inside out, recovering himself, he offers education about what science tells us about addiction, weaves in his own story and comes up with a book of experience, strength and hope. It’s clear that he’s a practitioner of the Twelve Steps, but he doesn’t merely parrot slogans. His is a well thought out work, which at times challenges some of A.A.’s assumptions. A really great read.</p>
<p>Road Dogs by Elmore Leonard</p>
<p>	Before I published Everybody Dreams I did a youtube video, trying to attract an agent or a publisher. In the video, I said I wasn’t capable of writing at the level of Barbara Kingsolver, but I think I told a story as well as Elmore Leonard. I’d like to go on record relating what an arrogant whelp I am: Elmore Leonard is also out of my league. How does he do it? No one writes dialogue, both spoken and the internal riffs, like Elmore Leonard. Road Dogs features something unusual: the reappearance of several characters Elmore has introduced in different novels. Jack Foley (from Out of Sight, played by George Clooney in the movie), Cundo Rey (from LaBrava) and Dawn Navarro (Riding The Rap) are the shadiest of characters, a group of vipers that warily circle each other in planning the next scam. Hats off to Elmore Leonard. The most entertaining read of my summer.</p>
<p>The Raw Shark Texts by Steven Hall</p>
<p>	What a strange book. Just like the movie, Memento, the protagonist wakes up with no knowledge of who he is. There’s a note that tells him to go see Dr. Randle, along with an address and a map, a picture of his vehicle and keys. He learns that he has a condition of severe dissociation, that he’s suffered these attacks before. And he’s warned not to read any letters he might get. After returning home, he gets a letter. It says don’t trust Dr. Randle. </p>
<p>So that’s for openers. Along the way you’ll be reminded of The Wizard of Oz, The Matrix, Jaws, Alice In Wonderland and the novels of Haruki Murakami (The Wind Up Bird Chronicles, specifically). Where is the line between imagination and reality? Can our ideas hurt, even kill us? What does it mean to be chased by a conceptual shark? This is supposed to be a movie, although I have the same reaction as when I heard a movie was being made of Naked Lunch: how the heck are they going to do that?</p>
<p>OTHER SUMMER HIGHLIGHTS</p>
<p>I was so disappointed to hear that MSU’s Jazz Studies was losing Derrick Gardner. Then I heard that Etienne Charles, who was a guest on Rodney Whitaker’s set at the Oldtown Jazzfest, is teaching at MSU this Fall. Etienne has just released a new disc, called Folklore, that I’ve been playing ever since I received it in the mail a couple of months ago. It’s a great disc, beautifully conceptualized and performed. I review each disc I receive, on a 0-5 star system. This is what I wrote about Folklore:<br />
 ***** Etienne Charles &#8211; FOLKLORE; Etienne Charles<br />
	This is a little masterpiece. Trinidad born trumpeter Charles leads a band through  a set of original compositions that call on influences from calypso to Miles. Charles’ rapport with saxist Jacques Scharz-Bart seems telepathic. A beautiful disc. Use tracks #1 (Folklore) or #3 (Dance with la Diablesse).</p>
<p>In addition, Rodney Whitaker wrote and premiered a piece dedicated to our mutual friend, Robert Busby (“The Mayor of Oldtown”), who was murdered a couple of years ago. The tune was titled “Robert’s Lament” and it is a wonderful and soulful ballad, an excellent tribute to a one of a kind individual. I hope Rodney records this on his next record.</p>
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		<title>4/20/09: News on Everybody Dreams &amp; Wise Woman</title>
		<link>http://mikestratton.com/general/news-on-everybody-dreams-wise-woman</link>
		<comments>http://mikestratton.com/general/news-on-everybody-dreams-wise-woman#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 20 Apr 2009 14:50:45 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Mike</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[General]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Everybody Dreams]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[speaking]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://mikestratton.com/playlists/42009-news-on-everybody-dreams-wise-woman</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[This weekend I received an piece of news that bowled me over. Whitney Spotts of Schuler Books in Eastwood Mall, East Lansing, contacted me via email saying that they needed more copies of Everybody Dreams. She then shared that they had just reviewed their sales, and Everybody Dreams was their best seller in General Fiction [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>This weekend I received an piece of news that bowled me over. Whitney Spotts of Schuler Books in Eastwood Mall, East Lansing, contacted me via email saying that they needed more copies of Everybody Dreams. She then shared that they had just reviewed their sales, and Everybody Dreams was their best seller in General Fiction for the first quarter of 2009! </p>
<p>So thank you all for buying and reading the book. I have had some amazing feedback from many of you and I am deeply touched at much of what you&#8217;ve shared. Some people are actually making profound changes in their lives as the result of reading this book. I&#8217;m glad it is making a difference and giving some people the courage to change. I&#8217;d go into more detail, but that would be giving away some of the fun of reading.</p>
<p>I&#8217;d also like to formally apologize to Lansing readers for all the lost sleep, the crazy dreams, the tears that some of you have experienced as the result of reading Everybody Dreams. Just kidding. I love it!</p>
<p>On Friday (4/24/09) I&#8217;ll  be delivering the keynote Friday for the Wise Woman Program (Michigan Breast &#038;  Cervical Cancer Control) at the Great Wolf Lodge in Traverse City. My topic is Motivation &#038; Beyond, and will be focused on how to access the healthiest parts of our selves in order to do the work to help others gain access to their own motivation to change. I&#8217;ve worked with this group before, delivering a two day training last spring. It was the only time in my career that I received completely unanimous 5 star ratings (on a scale to 5, you smarties!). So we have some history and some chemistry. </p>
<p>Thanks for looking at the web site. Feel free to send me a note or feedback on what you&#8217;d like to see.</p>
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